Abstract
From January 1992 to June 1997, we reviewed retrospectively eighteen femoral shaft
nonunions after intramedullary nailing and followed for an average of 31(18-53)months. We
investigated causes of nonunion and analyzed the results according to operative method.
Nonunion was divided into infected(4 cases) or noninfected types(14 cases). The causes of
noninfected nonunion were insufficient stability(7 cases) and bone defects(4 cases). In
insufficient stability, there were loosening of locked screw in four, absence of locked screw in
two, and breakage of locked screw in one. There was a correlation between severe comminuted
fracture with an early weight bearing and screw failure(p<0.05). Seven cases of nonunion were
treated with compression plate and cancellous bone grafting, four cases only bone grafting, three
cases Ilizarov external fixations, three cases dynamization, and one case renailing. The clinical
and roentgenographic healing processes were recorded. All achieved solid unions within an
average period of 11.7(2.5-41)months. An average time to union was 5.2(3-7)months after
dynamization, 7.3(7-8)months after bone grafting, 12 months after renailing, 12.9(4-25)months
after compression plate and cancellous bone grafting, and 21.3(11-41)months after Ilizarov
external fixation. The union period with noninfected nonunion was significantly shorter than
infected nonunion(9.2 months vs. 20.3 months; p<0.05).